A heroic mother died in a house fire — right after she
tossed her newborn from a second-story window
By Peter Holley
Nobody can be sure how
much time passed between the moment Shelby Carter realized her Illinois home
was engulfed in flames and the moment she decided to strap her 12-day-old
infant into a car seat and toss the baby from a second-story window.
Probably seconds, or
maybe a minute or two, investigators say.
But her decision — likely
the 21-year-old mother’s last — was gut-wrenching and heroic. Her quick
thinking saved her newborn before a wall of fire and smoke tore through the
upstairs bedroom of the wood-frame house where Carter lived with her mother,
investigators say.
“It’s just incredible
that she was able to pull her thoughts together to save her baby,” said Ed
Foglesonger, chief of the Wyoming-Speer Fire Protection District. “It’s just
too bad she couldn’t save herself, but I’d say it’s nothing short of a miracle
the way it ended up.”
When rescuers made their
way inside the home Monday morning in Wyoming, Ill., they found Carter’s body
in the bedroom.
An autopsy revealed that
she was killed by carbon monoxide intoxication from smoke inhalation after
smashing a window to save her baby, Foglesonger said. Rescuers found Carter’s
infant, Keana Davis, in her car seat, which was resting on top of a pile of
debris, the fire chief said.
Miraculously, he added,
the baby had just a minor burn and escaped serious injury.
Keana was taken to a
hospital in good condition and later released.
“The
good news is, the baby got home and is doing great,” Stark County Sheriff Steve
Sloan told the Peoria Journal Star a day after the fire.
The cause of the fire is
under investigation, but investigators said it doesn’t appear to be suspicious.
Firefighters battle a blaze Monday in which a 21-year-old woman was killed. (Tammy Wilkinson/GateHouse Media Illinois)
Carter’s death has dealt
a painful blow to the residents of Wyoming, a close-knit town of 1,400 people
about three hours southwest of Chicago. Sloan told the Journal Star that
Monday’s blaze was the first fatal fire in Stark County in perhaps 30 years.
A GoFundMe page set up to raise money for
Carter’s daughter and mother raised more than $5,500 in two days. Foglesonger
said the town has rallied around the family and found comfort knowing that her
final act was saving a child’s life.
On Facebook and GoFundMe,
family members and friends have hailed the young mother as a hero.
“Her
21st birthday was yesterday and on Facebook she had posted, you know, ‘What a
great birthday!'” Carter’s cousin, Shawna Burwell, told CBS affiliate WMBD. “This morning on
Snapchat I seen ‘loving these mommy moments’ and she had the baby laying on her
chest.”
The Kewanee Star Courier reported that
Carter’s mother, Kathy Hardy, posted a photo on Facebook of her infant
granddaughter at the hospital with the words “Beautiful Miracle.”
“Shelby was a fantastic
mom and proud of her baby girl,” the victim’s aunt, Deb Carter Burwell, added,
according to the newspaper.
“Words
cannot describe what has happened within our community today,” the
Wyoming-Speer Fire Protection District posted on Facebook. “We have experienced a
feeling that no department wants to go through. Words cannot express the way we
truly feel. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family involved.”
Shelby
graduated from Stark County High School in 2014, according to her obituary. While still in
school, friends said, she was a focused student who played center on the
school’s basketball team. Friends said Carter’s reserved demeanor disappeared
when she stepped on the basketball court, where she was known as a “feisty”
competitor.
“She was very, very
smart,” said Carter’s lifelong friend and teammate, Anna Steelman. “I think
people underestimated that about her because she was quiet and she wasn’t one
to make herself the center of attention. She stayed back in the crowd and did
her work and got stuff done on the court and in the classroom. She was very
task-oriented.”
After graduation, Carter
worked as a nail technician and “was currently going back to school at MidState
to be a Pharmacy Technician,” her obituary said.
“Playing basketball and
children were Shelby’s passion,” the obituary continued. “She loved every child
she came in contact with and they loved her. Her greatest moment was becoming a
mom.”
Taking care of children
came naturally to Carter because she was an inherently protective person,
Steelman said. She started babysitting at a young age and, when she got older,
she became the person friends turned to when they were having relationship
problems or needed advice, her friend said.
Asked whether she was
surprised that Carter lost her life saving her child, Steelman said,
“Absolutely not.”
“She was a strong girl
and if she had a task she would get it done, even if it meant sacrificing
herself,” she said. “She’s a hero and we’re all very proud of her.”
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